Prosecutor: Female Doc Gave Anna Nicole Lesbian Love Potion

Judge nixes talk of lesbian love affair between late model and psychiatrist

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Anna Nicole Smith was accused of having a lesbian affair with the doctor.

Saying he wanted to avoid "a circus sideshow," a judge barred prosecutors Thursday from asking a witness whether a lesbian relationship existed between late model Anna Nicole Smith and the psychiatrist accused of plying her with drugs.

Superior Court Judge Robert J. Perry objected when the issue was raised during questioning of Smith's bodyguard.

All three have pleaded not guilty. The defendants are not charged with Smith's death at a Florida hotel in 2007, which was ruled an accidental overdose.

Anna Nicole Smith: Life in Photos

In his second day on the witness stand, bodyguard Maurice Brighthaupt said repeatedly that Eroshevich and Stern, who was Smith's boyfriend-lawyer, never meant her any harm and cared deeply about her well-being.

Brighthaupt testified Wednesday that he saw both Stern and Eroshevich inject Smith with drugs at a time when she was so devastated by the death of her son in 2006 that she was unable to sleep or function and began abusing prescription medications.

Brighthaupt acknowledged accepting payments of $150,000 for interviews with various cable TV outlets after Smith's death. Many of the things he said then were lies, crafted to protect her reputation, he said.

Among them were statements that he never saw Smith take illicit drugs and that she was in control of everything, including decisions about her medication.

"I had a lot of time to think about everything I said in the past, and I'm trying to rectify everything now," he said.

Brighthaupt was expected to conclude his testimony Friday. Larry Birkhead, the father of Smith's daughter, was ordered by the judge to be ready to be the next witness.

Under Rose's questioning, Brighthaupt said that in October 2006, one month after Smith's son died, she went into a swimming pool outside her hotel suite, fell off a float and sank to the bottom. He said he fished her out and did CPR to revive her. She wound up in the hospital for two weeks with pneumonia, he said.

Brighthaupt also gave a vivid description of Smith's agonizing final days in February 2007, saying she was swigging sleep syrup, swallowing prescription medications and wandering in a dazed state.

The day before she died, Brighthaupt, a paramedic, said Eroshevich and Stern were present with another doctor when Smith, running a 105-degree fever, refused to go to a hospital because she didn't want to encounter any paparazzi.

"I got everyone in the room to agree if we couldn't get her temperature down we would take her to the hospital," Brighthaupt testified. He said the group decided to have him put her in a tub of water and pour ice over her.

"She was crying and begging to come out of the ice water," said Brighthaupt who thought it was the wrong therapy for the condition. Eventually, he said the ice brought her temperature down to 96 or 97.

"I wanted her to come out," he said. "I couldn't stand it when she cried."

Eventually, he said, "I picked her up and put her in a towel on the bed."

The following morning, he said, Stern left to look at a boat and Brighthaupt was dispatched to pick up visitors from the Bahamas. The bodyguard left his wife, a registered nurse, to watch over the sleeping Smith. After a short time, she called him.

"She said, 'Anna's not breathing,'" he recalled, saying he told her to call 911 while he rushed back to the suite.

"She looked pale. Her lips were a little blue. When I picked her up she was a dead weight," he recalled. "I didn't find a pulse. She wasn't breathing. I just put her on the floor and began doing CPR."

Paramedics arrived but she never regained a pulse, he said.

During the account, Stern covered his face with his hands in the courtroom.